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Supply Chain Management

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Title: Supply Chain Management


1
Supply Chain Management
  • Lecture 22

2
Outline
  • Homework 6
  • Today
  • Start with Chapter 14
  • Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9
  • Next week
  • Guest lecture
  • Paul Dodge, SVP Supply Chain at ProBuild
  • Finish Chapter 14 and start with Chapter 15

3
Detailed Outline
  • Thursday November 12 Chap 14
  • Tuesday November 17 Paul Dodge guest lecture
  • Thursday November 19 Chap 14, 15
  • Fall break
  • Thanksgiving
  • Tuesday December 1 Chap 15
  • Thursday December 3 Simulation Game briefing
  • Tuesday December 8 Chap 15, review
  • Thursday December 10 Simulation Game

4
Drivers of Supply Chain Performance
  • Facilities
  • Inventory
  • Transportation
  • Sourcing
  • Pricing
  • Information

(Chapters 4 and 5) (Chapters 10, 11,
12) (Chapters 4 and 13) (Chapter 14) (Chapter
15) (Chapter 16)
5
Comparing Different Suppliers
  • Green Thumb, uses 1000 bearings per week for
    their production of lawn mowers and snow blowers.
    Green Thumb is considering one of two suppliers
  • Supplier A charges 1.00 per bearing
  • Supplier B charges 0.97 per bearing

Which supplier should Green Thumb choose?
6
Comparing Different Suppliers
  • Green Thumb, uses 1000 bearings per week for
    their production of lawn mowers and snow blowers.
    Green Thumb uses a holding cost of 25 and is
    considering one of two suppliers
  • Supplier A charges 1.00 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 2000
  • Supplier B charges 0.97 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 8000

Which supplier should Green Thumb choose?
7
Comparing Different Suppliers
  • Green Thumb, uses on average 1000 bearings per
    week, with a standard deviation of 300, for their
    production of lawn mowers and snow blowers. It
    monitors inventory continuously and aims a cycle
    service level of 95. Green Thumb uses a holding
    cost of 25 and is considering one of two
    suppliers
  • Supplier A charges 1.00 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 2000. The supplier lead time is
    2 weeks
  • Supplier B charges 0.97 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 8000. The supplier lead time is
    6 weeks

Which supplier should Green Thumb choose?
8
Comparing Different Suppliers
  • Green Thumb, uses on average 1000 bearings per
    week, with a standard deviation of 300, for their
    production of lawn mowers and snow blowers. It
    monitors inventory continuously and aims a cycle
    service level of 95. Green Thumb uses a holding
    cost of 25 and is considering one of two
    suppliers
  • Supplier A charges 1.00 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 2000. The supplier lead time is
    2 weeks, with a standard deviation of 1 week
  • Supplier B charges 0.97 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 8000. The supplier lead time is
    2 weeks, with a standard deviation of 4 weeks

Which supplier should Green Thumb choose?
9
Comparing Different Suppliers
  • Green Thumb, uses on average 1000 bearings per
    week, with a standard deviation of 300, for their
    production of lawn mowers and snow blowers. It
    monitors inventory continuously and aims a cycle
    service level of 95. Green Thumb uses a holding
    cost of 25 and is considering one of two
    suppliers
  • Supplier A charges 1.00 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 2000. The supplier lead time is
    2 weeks, with a standard deviation of 1 week.
    Quality is poor
  • Supplier B charges 0.97 per bearing and requires
    an order size of 8000. The supplier lead time is
    2 weeks, with a standard deviation of 4 weeks.
    Quality is good

Which supplier should Green Thumb choose?
10
Sourcing Decisions in a Supply Chain
According to a KPMG survey, 77 regarded cost to
be as the most important or second most
important factor in all of their outsourcing
decisions
11
The Role of Sourcing in a Supply Chain
  • Sourcing is the entire set of business processes
    required to purchase goods (raw materials,
    components, products) and services

For any supply chain, the most significant
decision is whether to outsource the function or
perform it in-house
12
Outsourcing versus off-shoring
  • What is the difference?

A firm off-shores a supply chain function if it
maintains ownership but moves the production
facility offshore
A firm outsources if the firm hires an outside
firm to perform an operation rather than
executing the operation within the firm
13
Outsourcing in Practice
India and Philippines account for 50 of the
worlds business process outsourcing market
Source The A.T. Kearney Global Souring Index,
2009
14
Outsourcing in Practice
Source The A.T. Kearney Global Souring Index,
2009
15
Outsourcing in Practice
  • Trends in outsourcing
  • North Africa and Middle East are rising on the
    global sourcing index
  • North America accounts for 70 of offshore
    outsourcing spending, but European countries are
    catching up as their spending has risen faster
  • A move toward more outsourcing providers
  • Experienced labor is key to success

Source The A.T. Kearney Global Souring Index,
2009
16
In-House or Outsource
  • The decision to outsource is based on the growth
    in supply chain surplus provided by the third
    party and the increase in risk by using a third
    party

17
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • Lower cost and higher quality
  • Specialized third party is further along the
    learning curve for some supply chain activity
  • Capacity aggregation
  • Increase SC surplus by aggregating demand across
    multiple firms and gaining economies of scale

Intels family of mobile PC processors gives
consumers more choice by enabling PC makers to
design notebooks of every shape and size
18
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • Transportation aggregation
  • Increases supply chain surplus by aggregating
    transportation across a variety of shippers

19
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • Warehousing aggregation
  • Increases SC surplus by aggregating warehousing
    needs over several customers and lowering
    facility cost
  • Receivables aggregation
  • Increases SC surplus by aggregating receivables
    reducing collection cost (especially when
    retailing is fragmented)

Safexpress provides an unrivalled range of
logistics and supply chain solutions including
door to door distribution and single source
invoicing
20
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • Procurement aggregation
  • Increases SC surplus by aggregating procurement
    for many small players to facilitate economies of
    scale

Offering members preferred pricing and
volume-based rebates on truck equipment and
services through a community-driven purchasing
system
21
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • Information aggregation
  • Increases SC surplus by aggregating information
    and reducing search cost for the (online) customer

Provides the North American Trucking Industry
with the most comprehensive freight matching
service
22
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • A third party may be able to provide a
    sustainable growth of the surplus by aggregating
    capacity, inventory, inbound or outbound
    transportation, warehousing, procurement,
    information, receivables, or relationships to a
    level that the firm cannot on its own
  • A growth in surplus may also occur if the third
    party has lower costs or higher quality because
    of specialization or learning

23
How do third parties increase the supply chain
surplus?
  • Three important factors that affect the increase
    in surplus
  • Scale
  • Uncertainty
  • Specificity

A firm gains the most from outsourcing if its
needs are small, highly uncertain, and shared by
others
24
Transportation and Sourcing
What factors lead Wal-Mart to own its trucks
although many retailers outsource their
transportation?
25
How do third parties increase risk?
  • Less control over the function being outsourced
  • Reduced customer/supplier contact
  • Loss of internal capability and increase in third
    partys power
  • Increases complexity in coordination, and thus
    increases coordination cost
  • It is easy to underestimate the effort to
    coordination
  • Leakage of sensitive information
  • In case intellectual property needs to be shared
    with third parties, there is the danger of leakage

What are ways to mitigate these risks?
26
Sourcing Process
  • Once a decision to outsource has been made, the
    sourcing process includes

Supplier scoring and assessment
Designcollaboration
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
27
Sourcing Process
  • Supplier scoring and assessment
  • Process used to rate suppliers
  • Supplier selection
  • Choose the appropriate supplier(s)
  • Design collaboration
  • Work together with supplier when designing
    components for the final product
  • Procurement
  • Process placing orders and receiving orders from
    supplier(s)
  • Sourcing planning and analysis
  • Analyze spending across various suppliers,
    identify opportunities for decreasing cost

Supplier scoring and assessment
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Designcollaboration
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
28
Sourcing Process
Supplier scoring and assessment
Designcollaboration
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
29
Supplier scoring and assessment
  • Common fundamental mistake when choosing a
    supplier
  • Only focus on quoted price

Supplier performance should be compared on the
basis of the suppliers impact on total cost
30
Factors besides purchase price that influence
total cost
  • Replenishment lead times
  • Does it pay to select a more expensive supplier
    with a shorter lead time?
  • If lead time grows, safety inventory grows
    proportionally to the square root of the
    replenishment lead time
  • On-time performance
  • Is a more reliable supplier worth the extra
    pennies?
  • If variability of lead time grows, the required
    safety inventory at the firm grows

31
Factors besides purchase price that influence
total cost
  • Supply flexibility
  • The less flexible a supplier is, the more
    lead-time variability it will display as order
    quantities change
  • Delivery frequency/lot size
  • Delivery frequency affects the transportation
    cost, lot size affects the cycle inventory
    holding cost
  • Supply quality
  • Quality affects unit price and lead time as
    follow-up orders may need to be fulfilled to
    replace defective products
  • Inbound transportation cost
  • Sourcing a product overseas may have lower
    product cost, but generally incurs a higher
    inbound transportation cost

32
Factors besides purchase price that influence
total cost
  • Pricing terms
  • For example, quantity discounts (and the impact
    it has on cycle inventory)
  • Information coordination capability
  • Good coordination results in better planning and
    ultimately lower production, safety inventory,
    and transportation cost
  • Design collaboration capability
  • Can help reduce all cost, improve quality, and
    decrease time-to-market
  • Exchange rates, taxes, and duties
  • Important for global supply chains as it affects
    the unit price
  • Supplier viability
  • The likelihood that the supplier will be around
    to fulfill the promises it makes (uncertainty
    increases safety inventory)

33
Factors besides purchase price that influence
total cost
34
Sourcing Process
Supplier scoring and assessment
Designcollaboration
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
35
Sourcing Planning and Analysis
  • A firm should periodically analyze its (1)
    procurement spending and (2) supplier performance
    and use this analysis as an input for future
    sourcing decisions
  • Supplier performance analysis should be used to
    build a portfolio of suppliers with complementary
    strengths
  • Cheaper but lower performing suppliers should be
    used to supply base demand
  • Higher performing but more expensive suppliers
    should be used to buffer against variation in
    demand and supply from the other source

36
Sourcing Process
Supplier scoring and assessment
Designcollaboration
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
37
Supplier Selection and Contract Negotiation
  • Before selecting suppliers, a firm must decide
    whether to use single sourcing or multiple
    suppliers
  • What are benefits of having one supplier?
  • Single sourcing guarantees the supplier
    sufficient business
  • What are benefits of having more than one
    supplier?
  • Having multiple sources ensures a degree of
    competition and also the possibility of a backup
    should a source fail to deliver

38
Contracts and Supply Chain Performance
  • A contract should be structured to increase the
    firms profits and supply chain profits

Many shortcomings in supply chain performance
occur because the buyer and suppliers are two
different entities, each trying to optimize its
own profits
39
Contracts and Supply Chain Performance
  • Example
  • Consider a music store that sells compact discs.
    The supplier buys/manufactures compact discs at
    1 per unit and sells them to the music store at
    5 per unit. The retailer sells each disc to the
    end customer at 10. At this price demand is
    normally distributed, with a mean of 1,000 and a
    standard deviation of 300. The retailer has a
    margin of 5 per disc and can potentially lose 5
    for each unsold disc

Manufacturer
Distributor
Retailer
Customer
10
5
1
40
Contracts and Supply Chain Performance
10
5
5
1
0
(p-c)/(p-s) 0.5
F-1(CSL,?,?) 1,000
(see 12.3) 3,803
1,0004 4,000
Total profit 3,803 4,000 7,803
Manufacturer
Distributor
Retailer
Customer
10
5
1
41
Contracts and Supply Chain Performance
10
1
0
(p-c)/(p-s) 0.9
F-1(CSL,?,?) 1,384
versus 7,803
(see 12.3) 8,474
Manufacturer
Distributor
Retailer
Customer
10
1
42
Contracts and Supply Chain Performance
Manufacturer
Distributor
Retailer
Customer
10
5
1
Double marginalization results in suboptimal
order quantity and lower supply chain profits
43
Netflix
  • Blockbuster owns its DVDs
  • Netflix has established revenue sharing contracts
    with most studios
  • DVDs are purchased at cost
  • Netflix pays on average 1.40 to the studios each
    time their title is rent
  • At end of contract Netflix acquires some
    percentages of the units for retention or sale,
    the remaining DVDs are destroyed or returned to
    the original studio

44
Sourcing Process
Supplier scoring and assessment
Designcollaboration
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
45
Design Collaboration
  • 50-70 percent of spending at a manufacturer is
    through procurement
  • 80 percent of the cost of a purchased part is
    fixed in the design phase
  • Design collaboration with suppliers can result in
    reduced cost, improved quality, and decreased
    time to market

46
Design Collaboration
  • Design for logistics
  • Attempts to reduce transportation, handling, and
    inventory cost
  • Coors redesigned glass bottle reduced
    transportation cost
  • Design for manufacturability
  • Attempts to design products for ease of
    manufacture (part commonality, designing
    symmetrical parts, designing parts to provide
    access for catalog parts)
  • Manufacturers must become effective design
    coordinators throughout the supply chain
  • Ford designs with its suppliers (some subsystems
    are entirely designed and manufactured by their
    suppliers)

47
Sourcing Process
Supplier scoring and assessment
Designcollaboration
Supplier selection and contract negotiation
Procurement
Sourcing planning and analysis
48
Procurement
  • Procurement transactions begin with the buyer
    placing the order and end with the buyer
    receiving and paying for the order
  • Goal is to enable orders to be placed and
    delivered on schedule at the lowest possible
    overall cost
  • Two main categories of purchased goods
  • Direct materials components used to make
    finished goods
  • Memory, hard drives, and CD drives are direct
    materials for a PC
  • Indirect materials goods used to support the
    operations of a firm
  • PCs are indirect materials for a car manufacturer

49
Product Categorization by Value and Criticality
High
Critical items(i.e. components with long lead
times) Ensure availability
Strategic items(i.e. subsystems, electronics
for an auto manufacturer) Ensure long term
relationship
Criticality
General items(mostly indirect materials) Ensure
low cost
Bulk purchase items(small parts,
packaging) Ensure low cost
Low
Low
High
Value/Cost
50
Product Categorization by Value and Criticality
An auto manufacturer sources both office
supplies and subsystems such as seats. What, if
any, difference in sourcing strategy would you
recommend for the two types of products?
51
Outsourcing Logistics
  • A third-party logistics (3PL) provider performs
    one or more of the logistics activities relating
    to the flow of product, information, and funds
    that could be performed by the firm itself

52
Services Provided by 3PLs
How has globalization impacted sourcing decisions?
53
Outsourcing Logistics
  • A fourth-party logistics (4PL) provider manages
    other 3PLs. Whereas a 3PL targets a function, a
    4PL targets management of an entire process

54
Best Practice 4PL
  • Li Fung
  • The firm aggregates demand across hundreds of
    customers, capacity across thousands of
    suppliers, and uses detailed information to match
    supply and demand in the most cost effective
    manner
  • By sourcing appropriately Li Fung gets around
    regional trade umbrellas such as the EU and NAFTA

55
How do 4PLs Add Value?
  • How do 4PLs add value to a firm managing its own
    logistics providers?

The fundamental advantage that 4PLs may provide
comes from greater visibility and coordination
over a firms supply chain and improved handoffs
between logistics providers
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